Ammon v. Johnson

2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 149
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 149 (Ammon v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ammon v. Johnson, 2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 149 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

This is a proceeding in error to reverse an order of the court of common pleas in a proceeding for contempt made on the 12th day of January, 1888, which reads as follows:

“In the matter of the application for a writ of habeas corpus for the person of Josephine Blann, and in the hearing of the charge against said Josephine Ammon of contempt of court in refusing to make any proper or lawful return to said writ of habeas corpus, or to produce the said Josephine Blann, and also upon the hearing of the truth or falsity of said return, said cause came on to be heard on January 11, 1888, on the answer of said defendant, Josephine Ammon, the affidavits filed by both sides and oral evidence, and said Josephine Ammon was called to the stand and testified touching her said alleged contempt in said case, and upon the facts embodied in said return; that before she got through giving her evidence the said hearing was adjourned to January 12, 1888, but, before said adjournment, said Josephine Ammon was asked the same questions hereinafter referred to, and she was ordered by the court to answér the same, which she refused to do. And she was again called to the witness stand on said January 12, to further testify on the merits of said cause, and thereupon, while she was upon the said stand, the counsel for the complainant had lawfully put to her several lawful and pertinent questions touching the said alleged contempt and her knowledge of the whereabouts of said Josephine Blann; each and every one she then and there refused to answer. The said court of common pleas of said county, Judge E. T. Hamilton presiding, before which the case was being heard, then and there directed and ordered said Josephine Ammon to answer each and every of said questions, and the said Josephine Ammon then and there deliberately refused to answer either of them, and defied the authority of said court, and would not and did not answer said questions or either of them, and was then and there and thereby guilty, in open court, of misbehavior and contempt of said court and its judicial authority. Whereupon the court'doth find and adjudge the said Josephine Ammon guilty of said misbehavior and contempt of said court as aforesaid, and doth assess against her a fine of $100, and do order and adjudge that she stand committed to the jail of said county of Cuyahoga until the said sum of $100 is paid, and until she is ready and willing to purge herself of her said contempt as aforesaid, and to obey the orders of the court in that behalf, or until she is otherwise discharged by due process of law. And it is ordered and directed that the sheriff of said county take the said Josephine Ammon into his custody and commit her to the jail of said county.”

The original suit was one in habeas corpus by T. H. Johnson, as guardian of Josephine Blann, against Josephine Ammon, charging her with the unlawful detention of his ward. The petition for habeas corpus was filed January 3, 1888, and the writ was served the same day, but Mrs. Ammon having made no return on the 7th, the plaintiff filed an affidavit, charging her with a contempt in not doing so. An alias writ was issued, which was served. She made return on the 9th, the substance of which, so far as it is now necessary to state it, was that:

“Third — She had not the said Josephine Blann in her custody or power, nor is she, the said Blann, under any restraint from this respondent, and further, that at the time of the issuing and service of said habeas corpus the said Blann was [not omitted, probably] in her custody, power, or control, or in any manner restrained of her liberty by or through respondent.
“Fourth — She says she never had the said Josephine Blann in her custody or power, nor has she at any time transferred such supposed custody to another.”

[151]*151The hearing commenced on the 11th and was continued on the 12th, when Mrs. Ammon, being on the stand as a witness, refused to answer questions which she was directed by the court to answer, and the order already read was made to reverse which the petition in error was filed, and it is to be understood that the matter before us is simply the order made in regard to her contempt in refusing to answer questions as a witness when she was upon the stand.

There are numerous claims of error which can be considered more easily in an order and method more logical than was necessary or usual in a petition in error.

It is said first that the court had no jurisdiction to proceed after her return. In order that the court should have power to punish for contempt in not answering, it is necessary that the court should have jurisdiction in the case in which the questions were put. If the case was still pending, and she was properly a witness, the court had jurisdiction if she placed herself in contempt.

The action of habeas corpus — the great writ of right — as it is called, intended to protect personal liberty, is so old that this action has in a measure forms and modes peculiar to itself — but peculiarly well adopted to relieve a person illegally detained.

The application is to be by petition verified and filed as in other cases, sec. 5728, Rev. Stat.

The party defendant is required to make what is generally styled a return, but which is substantially an answer. Section 5744 provides when the return sworn to “shall be j>rivia facie evidence, and when it shall be considered only a plea of the facts therein set forth and the party claiming the custody shall be held to make proof of such facts.”

In the case of Knapp v. Thomas, 39 O. S., 375, 378, the return is called an answer, and so in Church’s Habeas Corpus, sec. 120, and Hurd on Habeas Corpus, 2d ed., p. 235, and in the case of White v. Gates, 42 O. S., 109, 111, the plaintiff demurred to the return as under sec. 5068, Rev. Stat., he would have the right to do to an answer, and the cause was determined upon that.

It is generally treated as a civil action. It is within the judiciary act of the United States. 4 Wall. (U. S.) Rep. 2, 1001. If by making a false return the proceedings could be stopped, what would become of this leading action, or of justice? Nor is it necessary that if the parties to the cause are in court that the body sought should be. U. S. v. Green, 3 Mason, 482; State v. Scott, 30 N. H., 247; In re Jackson, 15 Mich., 417, and see Church’s Habeas Corpus, 163. If an issue of law or fact is raised by the petition and answer or demurrer, it is to be heard and determined as in other cases.

In this case there was an issue of fact. Petitioner said Mrs. Ammon had the custody and detained Josephine Blann, and Mrs. Ammon said she had and did not. That issue was for hearing on proper evidence. . That upon a return that respondent had not had the custody, the petitioner was not remitted solely tova proceeding for contempt in making a false return, but that the cause should proceed to hearing, appears from sec. 5738, providing that the return should state:

1. Whether he has, or has not the party in his custody or control.

2. If he had, he shall set forth the authority for it.

3. If he has transferred such custody or restraint, he shall state particularly to whom, at what time, 'for what cause, and by what authority such transfer was made; and sec. 57§1, providing that “the proceedings upon a writ of habeas corpus may be reviewed on error as in other cases.”

Both of these sections first appear in the same act, passed February 8, 1847 (45 O.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ammon-v-johnson-ohcirctcuyahoga-1888.